The pace of Team West, the power of Alexander Ryazantsev, the lethal finishing of Sergei Mozyakin, and the lightning speed of Wojtek Wolski – KHL.ru presents the most significant records set during the eight-year history of the KHL All-Star Game.

In the Bashkortostan capital of Ufa, on the 21st and 22nd of January, the finest players in the League will compete in the Master Show and All-Star Game – the biggest winter event in Russian hockey. This year sees a radical change to the format: onto the ice will step not two teams, but four – each one representing a Division of the KHL, and they will contest two semi-finals and a final.

This is the ninth All-Star Game in the KHL’s history, and hockey fans have already been treated to spirited contests against the beautiful backdrop of Red Square and the packed ice palace in Minsk, an operatic solo from Mikhail Anisin in Riga, a graceful dance from Konstantin Barulin in Chelyabinsk, and much, much more. Every All-Star Game is unforgettable in its own way. It serves up great offensive combinations, superb goals, spectacular saves and a festive atmosphere. But to whom do we apply the superlatives? Who is the most ever-present, the highest scorer, or unluckiest goalie? Which club has been represented 24 times in this star-studded gathering? KHL.ru has collected the facts and figures behind the great achievers in the history of this glittering celebration of hockey excellence.

Master Show

There have been a total of 12 different contests in the Master Show over the years. Some, such as the Shootout, the Fastest Skater and the Team Relay, have already achieved tradition status and are firmly embedded in the program, while others, such as the Short Shootout or the Pairs’ Shooting Accuracy, turned out to be one-off events. The KHL is constantly searching for innovations to surprise and delight the fans, so some tests of speed, skill and strength are set aside and replaced with something fresher.

One of the Master Show’s firm favorites remains the Shootout. Who could forget Vladimir Tarasenko’s trickery, Pavel Datsyuk’s magic, Nikita Gusev’s stunning strike, or Linus Omark's blazing stick? But who are the overall masters of the Master Show Shootout? A glance at the list of winners shows that no individual player has captured the prize more than once, but we can spot a pattern among the teams. If we look at the results for East and West we can see that since the start of their rivalry (in the 2010-11 season) the men from the Orient lead 4-2.

Year

Winner

Team

2009

Danis Zaripov

Team Yashin

2010

Jozef Stumpel, Marcel Hossa

Team Jagr

2011

Evgeny Kuznetsov

Team Jagr (East)

2012

Vladimir Tarasenko

Team Fedorov (East)

2013

Pavel Datsyuk

West

2014

Yegor Milovzorov, Fyodor Malykhin

East

2015

Andrei Mironov

West

2016

Linus Omark

East

No less captivating has been the Fastest Skater, and the record here belongs to Wojtek Wolski, who in 2015 completed the circuit in only 13.178 seconds. The results table shows up another interesting fact regarding the teams. In contrast to the Shootout, four of the five fastest times have come from Team West players. The results also suggest players are becoming faster, with all the best times coming in 2014 or later.

Place

Year

Player

Result

Team

1

2015

Wojtek Wolski

13.178

West

2

2014

Milan Bartovic

13.48

West

3

2016

Brandon Kozun

13.548

West

4

2016

Anatoly Golyshev

13.593

East

5

2014

Leonid Komarov

13.63

West

The kings of the blue line compete in the Master Show Hardest Shot, and in the Riga 2012 event Alexander Ryazantsev broke the world record with an almighty strike clocked at 183.67 km/h (114.13mph), and no subsequent attempt has even come close. And not only has record-breaker Ryazantsev struck four of the top five shots, but he has won this event for two points of the compass: West (while at Severstal) and East (representing Traktor).

Place

Year

Player

Result

Team

1

2012

Alexander Ryazantsev

183.67

Team Fedorov (East)

2

2011

Denis Kulyash

177.58

Team Jagr (East)

3

2012

Alexander Ryazantsev

174.00

Team Fedorov (East)

4

2012

Alexander Ryazantsev

173.24

Team Fedorov (East)

5

2013

Alexander Ryazantsev

170.76

West

Such has been Ryazantsev's domination that Denis Kulyash is the only other player to force his way into the top five, but who else has excelled in this trial of strength? Here are the rankings from 6 to 10.

Place

Year

Player

Result

Team

6

2012

Janne Niskala

170.15

Team Ozolins (West)

7

2012

Janne Niskala

168.19

Team Ozolins (West)

8

2012

Ilya Nikulin

167.87

Team Fedorov (East)

9

2011

Alexander Guskov

166.91

Team Yashin (West)

10

2011

Karel Rachunek

165.33

Team Yashin (West)

Returning for a moment to the subject of skating speed, here are the team totals for victory in the Master Show Team Relay, with the West reigning supreme.

Place

Team

Total victories

Year(s) of victories

1

West

4

2011, 2013, 2014, 2015

2

East

2

2012, 2016

All-Star Games

The main attraction of the All-Star Games is the glut of glorious goals, and it will surprise no-one that the most prolific point-scorer of the past 8 years is also the all-time top scorer in the history of Russian national championships - Sergei Mozyakin.

Place

Player

Appearances

Goals

Assists

Points

1

Sergei Mozyakin

8

22

9

31

2

Alexander Radulov

6

5

19

24

3

Danis Zaripov

5

6

9

15

4

Dmitry Kagarlitsky

3

3

11

14

5

Ilya Kovalchuk

3

8

4

12

6

Evgeny Kuznetsov

3

6

5

11

7

Jagomir Jagr

3

4

7

11

8

Nikita Gusev

2

5

5

10

9

Jori Lehtera

2

3

7

10

*seven players share 10th-16th place with 9 points.

It is not only the forwards who fill their boots during the All-Star Games. The defensemen have also been the scourge of the goalies, and the three most deadly to date have been Kevin Dallman, Kirill Koltsov and Ilya Nikulin.

Place

Player

Appearances

Goals

Assists

Points

1

Kevin Dallman

6

2

7

9

2

Kirill Koltsov

3

1

6

7

3

Ilya Nikulin

6

2

4

6

4

Deron Quint

2

2

2

4

5

Sandis Ozolins

4

2

2

4

6-7

Anton Babchuk

1

1

3

4

6-7

Milan Jurcina

1

1

3

4

8

Chris Lee

2

2

1

3

*Five more defensemen have three points in All-Star Games

The All-Star Game is a happy hunting ground for goal scorers, and on this measure, too, the leader is Mozyakin with 22 Goals. Who would bet against him adding to that total on Sunday?

Place

Player

Appearances

Goals

1

Sergei Mozyakin

8

22

2

Ilya Kovalchuk

3

8

3

Matt Ellison

1

7

4

Marcel Hossa

3

7

5

Evgeny Kuznetsov

3

6

6

Danis Zaripov

5

6

*six more players have scored five goals in All-Star Games

It’s almost a surprise when Mozyakin does not hold a record, but in the list of the finest assistants, we see that Alexander Radulov is the undisputed champion when it comes to providing the marksmen with the ammunition.

Place

Player

Appearances

Assists

1

Alexander Radulov

6

19

2

Dmitry Kagarlitsky

3

11

3

Danis Zaripov

5

9

4

Sergei Mozyakin

8

9

5

Jori Lehtera

2

7

6

Jagomir Jagr

3

7

7

Alexei Yashin

3

7

8

Kevin Dallman

6

7

*two more players have six assists in All-Star Games

The previous KHL All-Star Game in Moscow surpassed all others for high scoring, and a host of records were broken as a result. The two teams shared 51 goals, so it follows that 2016 features heavily in the lists for most points in a single game. Brandon Kozun secures the number one spot with 9, just ahead of five players – including Mozyakin, of course – on 8.

Place

Player

Points

Year

1

Brandon Kozun

9

2016

2-6

Stephane Da Costa

8

2016

2-6

Danis Zaripov

8

2016

2-6

Dmitry Kagarlitsky

8

2016

2-6

Sergei Mozyakin

8

2016

2-6

Matt Ellison

8

2016

7-10

Sergei Mozyakin

7

2011

7-10

Sergei Mozyakin

7

2015

7-10

Alexander Radulov

7

2016

7-10

Linus Omark

7

2016

That same year, Matt Ellison scored seven times, thus breaking the record for most goals in an All-Star Game.

Place

Player

Goals

Year

1

Matt Ellison

7

2016

2-3

Sergei Mozyakin

6

2015

2-3

Sergei Mozyakin

6

2015

4-5

Sergei Mozyakin

5

2011

4-5

Brandon Kozun

5

2016

6-9

Evgeny Kuznetsov

4

2013

6-9

Ilya Kovalchuk

4

2015

6-9

Stephane Da Costa

4

2016

6-9

Danis Zaripov

4

2016

One player who can out-assist Radulov is Dmitry Kagarlitsky. In the 2016 event he provided the killer pass for seven goals. A record, of course.

Place

Player

Assists

Year

1

Dmitry Kagarlitsky

7

2016

2

Alexander Radulov

6

2016

3-7

Alexander Radulov

5

2011

3-7

Alexei Yashin

5

2011

3-7

Jori Lehtera

5

2015

3-7

Danis Zaripov

5

2016

3-7

Linus Omark

5

2016

All-Star Games are played in such a friendly spirit that the penalty box is always empty and infringements of the rules are a rarity, but there are players who get punished. We are talking, of course, about the goalies, who would never allow so many goals in the regular championship or play-offs. The most frequently beaten goaltender in All-Star Game history is Konstantin Barulin, who has picked the puck out of the net 29 times in 5 appearances, but he was also the star who captured everyone’s hearts with his balletic dance moves.

Place

Goaltender

Appearances

Ice time (minutes : seconds)

Goals allowed

1

Konstantin Barulin

5

149:02

29

2

Alexander Salak

2

59:32

22

3

Michael Garnett

3

87:39

16

4

Juha Metsola

1

28:40

14

5

Mikhail Biryukov

2

60:53

13

6

Alexander Yeryomenko

2

58:05

12

7

Alexei Murygin

1

29:12

12

8

Ilya Sorokhin

1

30:48

11

9

Chris Holt

1

27:10

10

10

Vasily Koshechkin

1

30:03

10

Mozyakin has played in every All-Star Game. The attendance record for goaltenders is held by

Konstantin Barulin (five outings) and the most frequently selected defensemen are Ilya Nikulin and Kevin Dallman (each with six call-ups).

Appearances

Player

Position

8

Sergei Mozyakin

Forward

6

Kevin Dallman

Defenseman

6

Ilya Nikulin

Defenseman

6

Alexander Radulov

Forward

5

Konstantin Barulin

Goaltender

5

Danis Zaripov

Forward

4

Sandis Ozolins

Forward

4

Alexei Morozov

Forward

*18 players have appeared in three KHL All-Star Games

Each All-Star Game has featured at least one SKA player, and the same boast can be made by Dinamo Minsk, Avangard and Metallurg Magnitogorsk. The Petersburg club head our list due to the higher number of appearances in the big event.

Club

Number of All-Star Game s featuring club players

All-Star Game appearances*

SKA

8

24

Ak Bars

7

23

Avangard

8

21

Metallurg (Magnitogorsk)

8

21

CSKA

7

20

Salavat Yulaev

7

17

Barys

7

13

Lokomotiv

7

13

Dinamo (Minsk)

8

12

Atlant

6

12

Dinamo (Riga)

5

11

Sibir

6

9

Dynamo (Moscow)

6

8

Traktor

5

8

Severstal

5

7

Vityaz

5

6

Torpedo

5

6

Amur

4

5

Avtomobilist

4

4

Spartak

4

4

Ugra

4

4

Medvescak

3

4

Jokerit

2

4

Slovan

2

4

Admiral

2

3

Metallurg (Novokuznetsk)

2

3

HC MVD

2

3

HC Sochi

2

3

Lada

2

2

Neftekhimik

2

2

Lev (Praha)

1

1

Lev (Poprad)

1

1

*figures represent total appearances; as some players have featured in more than one All-Star Game; the total number of individual players selected is often lower

The KHL spans eight countries: Russia, Belarus, Latvia, Slovakia, Finland, Kazakhstan, China and Croatia. But the League is home to far more nationalities, and no fewer than 14 nations have seen their citizens selected to take part in the All-Star Game.

Country

Number of players

Appearances

Russia

83

152

Czech Republic

20

30

Canada

18

29

USA

12

14

Finland

12

14

Slovakia

11

14

Sweden

10

12

Latvia

6

9

Belarus

3

3

Norway

1

2

Denmark

1

1

Kazakhstan

1

1

Poland

1

1

France

1

1

In Ufa this weekend we will doubtless see the stars smash more records, surprise us with sparkling action and delight us with phenomenal tricks. Not long now!

KHL.ru is the official Web site of the Kontinental Hockey League. All KHL logos and marks as well as all other proprietary materials depicted herein are the property of the KHL and may not be reproduced without the prior written consent of KHL, ltd

KHL.ru is the official Web site of the Kontinental Hockey League. All KHL logos and marks as well as all other proprietary materials depicted herein are the property of the KHL and may not be reproduced without the prior written consent of KHL, ltd